I'm trying to cure a Silverface Fender Bassman 70 from severe buzzing at 100hz
Schematic is here: https://schematicheaven.net/fenderam..._bassman70.pdf
Gut shot:
Filter caps:
I've tested paralleling the filter caps with a 100uF capacitor one at a time. When connecting the capacitance as in the pic above the buzz level drops from very loud to loud (from 65 mVpp to 50 mVpp), indicating that the cap in the green circle is bad.
The dog house on the Bassman amp has a total of 7 capacitors in the doghouse compared to the Twin Reverb. The two extra capacitors are 63uF 100V and 100uF 100V. I'm guessing these are the negative bias caps but they are moved to the doghouse compared to the Twin reverb, is that correct?
The negative bias caps (if I am correct in my assumption) seem to have different values... could that be a problem?
What else could be causing the 100hz except for the bad filter cap discovered?
Adjusting the hum balance would only effect 50hz filament hum if I understand correctly... so that won't be a solution.
Schematic is here: https://schematicheaven.net/fenderam..._bassman70.pdf
Gut shot:
Filter caps:
I've tested paralleling the filter caps with a 100uF capacitor one at a time. When connecting the capacitance as in the pic above the buzz level drops from very loud to loud (from 65 mVpp to 50 mVpp), indicating that the cap in the green circle is bad.
The dog house on the Bassman amp has a total of 7 capacitors in the doghouse compared to the Twin Reverb. The two extra capacitors are 63uF 100V and 100uF 100V. I'm guessing these are the negative bias caps but they are moved to the doghouse compared to the Twin reverb, is that correct?
The negative bias caps (if I am correct in my assumption) seem to have different values... could that be a problem?
What else could be causing the 100hz except for the bad filter cap discovered?
Adjusting the hum balance would only effect 50hz filament hum if I understand correctly... so that won't be a solution.
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